Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 5:56:17 GMT
On Friday, May 17, 2013, Enrique Guerrero Aviña, a university student at the UNAM Faculty of Philosophy and activist for economic, social, cultural and environmental rights, was driving near the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City. At 10:45 p.m. at night, the car of the chess teacher, who was also a chess teacher, was hit by two white vans without any official letterhead with individuals dressed in civilian clothes and armed, who shot him with long weapons to make him surrender. After the attack, Enrique got out of his car asking for help because he believed it was an assault. Then, without anyone presenting an arrest warrant or reporting the alleged crimes committed, the armed individuals forced Enrique, by hitting and pushing him, into one of the white vans to take him to a warehouse where he remained held throughout the night. There, the subjects blindfolded him. They stripped him from the waist down. They beat him for hours. They suffocated him with a plastic bag. And they threatened to rape him if he did not speak.
You are going to speak or we are going to kill you” During the time the torture lasted, the agents interrogated him repeatedly to incriminate members of social movements throughout the country, including environmental organizations, unions and political movements. “'Who do you know in Oaxaca'”? I responded that I am Bahamas Mobile Number List a chess player because I am a chess master, and they continued to threaten me. Suddenly, they told me: “You are going to speak or we are going to kill you.” At that moment, I heard how they cut a cartridge very close to my head and pointed a gun at my forehead,” Enrique Guerrero says in a letter. "Then I heard a voice that said: 'don't shoot him, if he doesn't cooperate, fuck off the son of a bitch.' Then, they removed the gun from my forehead. Afterwards, they began to suffocate me with a bag. Someone held my body, another held my feet, and another put the bag on my head.
They took it off and put it back on, over and over again,” the activist adds in the letter. Thirty hours after the arrest, a time during which his family believed he was missing, the agents transferred Enrique Guerrero on Sunday, May 18, to the facilities of the Special Prosecutor's Office for Investigation of Organized Crime (SEIDO), also in Mexico City. . Already in the facilities of the agency, a public ministry agent threatened him into confessing to having been involved in the kidnapping three months earlier of two nephews of the president of the Business Coordinating Council, Gerardo Gutiérrez Candani, in the state of Oaxaca. When Enrique refused to admit to the accusation, the agent pressured him to include in his statement at least something suggesting criminal activity so that he could be charged. “The whole time I was at SEIDO they were asking me questions, threatening me, insulting me. At one point a SEIDO Public Prosecutor's Office called me and told me: 'if you don't point out the leader of the gang, you and your family are not going to finish it off.